The hosts - playing in front of a half-empty stadium -
appeared to have salvaged some pride after their Copa del Rey first-leg
thumping, but were undone late on yet again

Barcelona left it late to set a new club record unbeaten run with a 1-1 draw at Valencia, which saw them into the Copa del Rey final with an 8-1 aggregate victory.

Defending
champions Barca subjected Gary Neville's men to a humiliating drubbing
last week, with Luis Suarez scoring four and Lionel Messi netting a
hat-trick.

Only five players remained from the 22 who took to the
field at Camp Nou and the match had the feel of a dead rubber – not
even the most committed Valencia fan could argue with any great
conviction that their side would turn this tie around.

And the
hosts' efforts amounted to a single Alvaro Negredo strike before
half-time, although their attacking endeavour arguably merited more.

There were plenty of positives for Neville, who is yet to register a
Liga win as Valencia boss, but Wilfrid Kaptoum scored his first
Barcelona goal six minutes from time to make it 29 unbeaten in all
competitions, breaking a Barca record set by Pep Guardiola's 2010-11
vintage.

Sevilla likely await in the final, as they head to Celta Vigo on Thursday with a 4-0 aggregate advantage.

Vast
swathes of empty seating contributed to a low-key atmosphere at the
Mestalla, and Barcelona's brighter start did nothing to lift the spirits
of those in attendance.

Sandro fired over the crossbar from the
edge of the box from an early cutback, before Ivan Rakitic failed to
find the target with a fizzed effort from slightly further out.

Jeremy
Mathieu made a vital interception when Pablo Piatti played the ball
across the six-yard box with Santi Mina lurking in the 22nd minute, and
17-year-old Fran Villalba came close to curling in his first Valencia
goal as the hosts began to cause more of a threat.

And it was the home side who broke the deadlock when Negredo
evaded the Barca defence to run onto a ball over the top and cut into
the net, although there was an element of good fortune in his rounding
of goalkeeper Marc-Andre ter Stegen.

Mina came close to making a
further dent in Barca's now six-goal advantage when he headed just over
in the early stages of the second half.

Barca – quite
understandably – rarely shifted out of first gear, with Rakitic
unleashing wayward drive before sending a tame effort into the arms of
Jaume Domenech.

Valencia continued to probe, though, and Ter Stegen had to be on his guard to tip over a Danilo free-kick.

However, as time ticked away, so did the Valencia's chances of pulling off the miracle comeback, and Kaptoum got on the end of Juan Camara's pass to slot beyond Domenech for the historic equaliser.